ELASTIC TISSUE AND SMOOTH-MUSCLE VOLUME IN ELASTIC AND MUSCULAR TYPE ARTERIES IN THE DOG
- 1 January 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 29 (4) , 351-+
Abstract
Relative elastic tissue and smooth muscle volumes were determined by a stereological point-counting method in arteries with a progressively diminishing diameter from the aorta towards the periphery. The volume relationship between the smooth muscle cell and its nucleus was determined by the same method. Mean nuclear volume amounted to 6.9% of total smooth muscle cell volume. Relative elastic tissue volume fell from the aorta towards the peripheral arteries, from 22.6% in the ascending aorta to 4-6% in the smallest arteries examined. Relative smooth muscle volume was practically the same and differences between the individual values in the vast majority of arteries examined were non-significant. Total smooth muscle volume, calculated from the volume of the smooth muscle cell nuclei, varied mostly from 45-55%. The ability of small and medium muscular type arteries to change their diameter actively by muscular contraction (against elastic type arteries, in which this ability is less expressed) is facilitated by the organization of the structural components of the arterial wall and by the lower elastic tissue volume, which is compensated for by the volume of the other passive components of the vascular wall, while the relative smooth muscle volume remains the same.This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Collagen and Elastin Content in Canine Arteries Selected from Functionally Different Vascular BedsCirculation Research, 1966
- Correlation of Visco-elastic Properties of Large Arteries with Microscopic StructureCirculation Research, 1966
- Elastin Content of the Aorta and the Pulmonary Artery in the JapaneseAngiology, 1965
- Changes in amino acid composition of aortic elastin with aging and atherosclerosisAmerican Heart Journal, 1965
- The collagen and elastin content of the arterial wall in the dogProceedings of the Royal Society of London. B. Biological Sciences, 1957